Pa. Teachers Rehired After Admitting to Having Sex in School, Accusations of Harrasment


In McKeesport, Pennsylvania, Angela DiBattista, a fourth grade teacher who lost her job in 2011 after admitting to having sexual relations in the early 2000s with another fourth grade teacher, Patrick Collins, also under investigation at the time, was reinstated for the school year that starts next week. She was fired being charged with "immorality" after the two admitted to having sex between six and eight times at the school after hours.
Collins was fired in 2005 on charges of harassment of DiBattista and violating school policy, but was "absolved," reinstated and able to retire in 2006. DiBattista's attorneys maintained she had been given immunity for testifying against Collins, something a court agreed with. An appeals court then overturned her firing.
Two state courts ruled that DiBattista was fired without cause for admitting she had sex with another teacher inside a classroom.
Commonwealth Court said testimony from the district and DiBattista's witnesses at a 2010 disciplinary hearing supported the conclusion that DiBattista was promised immunity for admitting her actions with Patrick Collins, a fellow teacher and a former McKeesport Area Education Association president.
Judge Renee Cohn Jubelirer wrote, "The parties mutually intended that if (DiBattista) agreed to testify she would have no concern or fear that any district action would be brought against her as a result of such cooperation."
State Supreme Court ruled in March to deny the district's appeal to reverse a 15-page decision from Commonwealth Court.
Yesterday Robby Soave broke down how the federal government was bullying colleges into policing their students' sexual activity by lowering the standard of evidence required for disciplinary action up to expulsion, effectively denied due process.
In McKeesport, on the other hand, teachers who admit to having sex on school property (not part of their job, probably even in some teachers handbooks as a "don't"), and one, a union leader, accused of harassing a coworker (both had spouses), can spend months in court and get their jobs back (so having sex on school property, not a firable offense—remember only DiBattista was found to have been offered immunity, to testify against a teacher she accused of harassing her). Yet employment as a teacher ought to be considered a privilege, and certainly a position more privileged than students trying to purchase (by cash or credit) a higher education.
Meanwhile on Staten Island, school administrators showed their ability to avoid having to take responsibility for making decisions by taking a "by the book" zero tolerance-like approach. A New Dorp High School culinary arts teacher was "reprimanded" for allowing three students to try a half-teaspoon of cinnamon during a class about spice. An anonymous tipster complained the teacher allowed students to perform the "cinnamon challenge," even though none of the students involved reported any illness, they consumed less cinnamon than the challenge and had water to wash the drying taste down with. Is it too much to ask those educated and paid to administer education to use their informed discretion and purported expertise to make common sense decisions, and policies, rather than creating a system of reprimands and firings and rehirings that they can claim to be running on autopilot?
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is the headline correct? student?
dorp
NEW Dorp
So is dorp the new derp? That's really dorptastic.
Since we've learned today that dorp is Dutch for village (if this is wrong, I don't want to know), I suggest a new town called The Village of Dorp.
Dorp Dorp?
This appears to be a story about two fourth grade teachers having sex, not a teacher and a fourth grade student having sex.
Honestly, I don't see how having sex after hours is related to teacher performance.
Who cares?
+1 George Costanza
It's not necessarily that they should have been fired but that this is a ridiculous procedure to be SOP for discipline/teacher policy. And administrators should have the ability to mete out stiffer discipline for things like harassment of other employees.
Is it too much to ask those educated and paid to administer education to use their informed discretion and purported expertise to make common sense decisions
Yes. Yes it is.
There is only one question on the oral exam for the EdD degree. And the correct answer is "I'm sorry, it's district policy."
I thought the answer was 42.
+1 answer to life, the universe and everything
You can have common sense or you can fetishize equality. You cannot have both.
In fact asking for discretion or expertise is a contract violation and will land you in hot water with the teacher's union.
The "TribLive reports" link is broken.
And how can there be so many stories about a public school teacher sex scandal, without a picture of her somewhere?
So he was putting his brick in her wall. As long as they wiped down the desks after.
So a teacher fucks another teacher, then files a sexual harassment complaint against the teacher she fucked, but then subsequently had more consensual sex with the same teacher.
Neither of these creeps should be working with children. Yet they are given the government's blessing to do so.
Lets file this case under "Who gives a fuck?"
Seriously, this is two people having kinky sex when nobody is around. We're all guilty of this at one time or another.
Especially Nikki.
At a prior employer of mine, 2 colleagues were terminated after allegedly having sex on the conference room table. As I understand it, the termination went something like "I don't know what really happened, and I don't care. You are an at-will employee and your services are no longer required".
It's always fun to get fucked by your boss after getting fucked by a co-worker.
Was the conference room table made of glass or wood?
Because it matters.
Because if it was glass, they could take ass-cheek prints?
I'd be really scared to google TribLive at work, jus'sayin'.
It's obvious what the answer to this problem is... allow students to unionize - at that point they can never be kicked out of school.
But they don't have money to donate to politicians, and in the case of the littleuns, if they strike they go to jail.
Sounds straight up to me dude. Wow.
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